1st Edition

Kinship and Continuity Pakistani Families in Britain

By Alison Shaw Copyright 2000
    320 Pages
    by Routledge

    338 Pages
    by Routledge

    Kinship and Continuity is a vivid ethnographic account of the development of the Pakistani presence in Oxford, from after World War II to the present day. Alison Shaw addresses the dynamics of migration, patterns of residence and kinship, ideas about health and illness, and notions of political and religious authority, and discusses the transformations and continuities of the lives of British Pakistanis against the backdrop of rural Pakistan and local socio-economic changes. This is a fully updated, revised edition of the book first published in 1988.

    From Pakistan to Britain, the process of settlement, households and family relationships, the idiom of caste, Biradari solidarity and cousin marriage, honour and shame - gender and generation, health illness and the reproduction of the Biradari, taking and giving - domestic rituals and female networks, public faces - leadership, religion and political mobilization

    Biography

    Alison Shaw

    "This is an engaging account of the Oxford Pakistani community, which convincingly updates the first edition."

    "...a superb anthropological study which should rank with the best for teaching purposes as a model for the craft and the subject. Based upon magnificent fieldwork in England and Pakistan, it is beautifully written and produced, and though it deals with the relatively small Pakistani community in Oxford, has relevance for the understanding of Pakistani settlement in Britain generally."

    ' ...by a wide margin, the richest, most comprehensive and most lively account yet produced of life within Britain's booming ethnic colonies.' - Roger Ballard, University of Manchester, UK